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chadwick
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chadwick

n. (surname: English)

Gazetteer
Chadwick, IL -- U.S. village in Illinois
Population (2000): 505
Housing Units (2000): 228
Land area (2000): 0.316519 sq. miles (0.819780 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.316519 sq. miles (0.819780 sq. km)
FIPS code: 12294
Located within: Illinois (IL), FIPS 17
Location: 42.014081 N, 89.889078 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 61014
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Chadwick, IL
Chadwick
Wikipedia
Chadwick

Chadwick may refer to:

Chadwick (crater)

Chadwick is a lunar crater that lies on the far side of the Moon's surface, just beyond the southwestern limb. It is located to the northwest of the crater De Roy, and was previously designated De Roy X before being given its current name by the IAU. This region of the lunar surface lies at the southern end of the ejecta blanket that surrounds the Mare Orientale impact basin.

Chadwick is roughly circular with a sharp-edged rim. The inner wall is somewhat wider to the south-southeast, giving the crater a slight outward bulge toward De Roy. The rim has not been significantly worn, and is not marked by any impacts of note. The interior surface has a somewhat uneven appearance.

This crater lies within the Mendel-Rydberg Basin, a 630 km wide impact basin of Nectarian age.

Chadwick (surname)

Chadwick is an English surname of Anglo-Saxon origin; it is a combination of the modernised Old English given name Ceadda, and the anglicised Old Norse word vík which was introduced into England by Norsemen settlers. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Andrés Chadwick, Chilean politician
  • Alan Chadwick, English organic farming innovator
  • Allan Chadwick, Australian Paralympic shooter
  • Arthur Chadwick, former English footballer
  • Cassie Chadwick
  • David Chadwick (footballer)
  • Drew Chadwick, singer in Emblem3
  • Edgar Chadwick, former footballer
  • Edwin Chadwick, an English social reformer
  • E. Wallace Chadwick
  • Frank Chadwick, acclaimed American game designer and New York Times Best Selling author
  • French Ensor Chadwick, United States Navy officer who contributed to naval education
  • George Whitefield Chadwick, American Romantic composer
  • Guy Chadwick, English musician
  • H. Beatty Chadwick, jailed 14 years for civil contempt of court for failing to produce non-existent money
  • Hector Munro Chadwick, prominent English philologist and historian and a professor at the University of Cambridge
  • Helen Chadwick British Conceptual artist
  • Henry Chadwick (writer), prominent baseball figure, often called "the father of baseball"
  • Henry Chadwick (theologian), English theologian and Regius Professor at both the universities of Oxford and Cambridge
  • James Chadwick, English physicist and recipient of the 1935 Nobel Prize in physics for the discovery of the neutron
  • James Read Chadwick, prominent American gynecologist and medical librarian
  • Jeffrey R. Chadwick, Latter-Day Saint archeologist
  • John Chadwick, co-author of the decipherment of the Linear B Greek script
  • John White Chadwick
  • June Chadwick
  • Justin Chadwick
  • Les Chadwick
  • Luke Chadwick
  • Lynn Chadwick, English artist and sculptor
  • Nick Chadwick, Plymouth Argyle F.C. footballer
  • Nora Kershaw Chadwick
  • Owen Chadwick
  • Peter Chadwick Australian Queens Counsel
  • Paul Chadwick, comic-book creator
  • Paul Chadwick (author), pulp magazine author
  • Robert E. Lee Chadwick (1930–2014), American anthropologist and archaeologist
  • Roy Chadwick
  • Samuel Chadwick, religious minister
  • Sheila Chadwick, music critic, entertainment news writer, author and host of "The Ghetto Cooking Show"
  • Stephanie Chadwick
  • Stephen F. Chadwick
  • W. D. Chadwick American football, baseball, and basketball coach.

Usage examples of "chadwick".

James Chadwick, devoted eleven intensive years to hunting for neutrons before finally succeeding in 1932.

Going right back to the invention of the box score in 1845, and its subsequent improvement in 1859 by a British-born journalist named Henry Chadwick, there had been numerate analysts who saw that baseball, more than other sports, gave you meaningful things to count, and that by counting them you could determine the value of the people who played the game.

But what got counted was often simply what was easiest to count, or what Henry Chadwick, whose reference point was cricket, had decided was important to count.

Henry Chadwick was usually the beginning, and occasionally the end, of the answer.

In cricket there was no such thing as a walk: Chadwick had to get his mind around a new idea.

The tool was ill-designed for the task: Chadwick was better at popularizing baseball statistics than he was at thinking through their meaning.

James Read Chadwick, it is only my revenge for his having kept me awake so often and so long while he was urging on the undertaking in which he has been preeminently active and triumphantly successful.

Professor Chadwick already was in the middle of his speech when Bill Graham, Harmony Curtis and Art Wohl moved quietly down the center aisle, took their seats: The basement was full, the audience silent, attentive.

Let's talk to Chadwick, discuss the risk factor before you agree to this test.

Laura's guardian, Lord Chadwick Hamilton, warns her of Jace's dangerous past.

In the room with walls bound like books in large grained, crushed morocco, Chadwick and Count Donatien Alphonse Francois, marquis de Sade, sat in high-backed chairs playing chess at a C Fifteen moneychanger's table.

Instead of trying to de-sex, Mercedes Chadwick used her sexuality to try to gain control.

Reland Huxford, the Earl of Chadwick, had decried the possibility of a curse on one so fair and had rushed recklessly on with his courtship, heedless of the dire fates of those who had preceded him.

Agatha Chadwick looked down at the garnet drop earring she'd separated from the pile.

Even after the Chadwicks lost that colt at Keeneland back in—what was it?